Is darren star gay

Melrose Place creator Darren Star describes the often insulting reaction of Fox network executives to the traits "Matt Fielding," who was gay. He also defines what differentiated "Matt" from earlier depictions of homosexual people on television:

"The issue wasn’t that he was gay, it was the issues that approach with being gay. And I think up to that point it was like if you had a gay character on television...the issue for that character would be, oh my god, he’s queer . And in this case the character was out...he just had a being. He was leading his life."

Watch Darren Star’s occupied interview to hear the stories behind the iconic shows he’s created: Beverly Hills, 90210, Melrose Place, and Sex and the City.

TelevisionAcademy.com/Interviews

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Tuesday night saw Darren Star (Sex and the City, Younger, Emily In Paris) and Jeffrey Richman’s (Modern Family) modern Netflix comedy series Uncoupled, starring Neil Patrick Harris, premiere at New York’s iconic Paris Theater, followed by a glitzy cocktail reception at the nearby Plaza Hotel. The Queer Review’s editor James Kleinmann was on the elegant grey carpet at the event to speak with the creators and cast about the demonstrate, which follows luxury Manhattan real estate agent Michael (Harris) as he deals with the aftermath of a sudden uncoupling from his romantic partner, Colin (Tuc Watkins).

“It’s about a homosexual man entering middle age being unexpectedly single”, co-creator Darren Star tells The Queer Review. “He’s finding himself having to start over at approaching 50 and rediscovering what dating is all about now”.

“We wanted to write a romantic comedy with a gay lead”, adds Uncoupled co-creator Jeffrey Richman. “We thought of the lowest place we could start him at. His companion of 17 years wakes up one day and says, ‘I’m gone, it’s over, and I don’t want to talk

Bouncily bingeable, 'Uncoupled' delivers exactly what you'd expect from Darren Star

DAVID BIANCULLI, HOST:

This is FRESH AIR. The new comedy series "Uncoupled" stars Neil Patrick Harris as a gay Recent Yorker whose long-term relationship abruptly ends. The series was created by Darren Star, known for such shows as "Melrose Place" and "Sex And The City." Our critic-at-large John Powers says that "Uncoupled," which drops today on Netflix, delivers exactly what you'd hope for from a exhibit by Darren Star.

JOHN POWERS, BYLINE: A while back, I became obsessed by the diaries of Witold Gombrowicz, the great Polish journalist who viewed the world through eyes that cut love scalpels. Human being, he said, is a constant war between maturity and immaturity, a war that immaturity ultimately wins. No matter how old and wise we are or think we are, we last , at bottom, adolescence. If anyone in pop culture seems to confirm this idea, it's Darren Star, the hitmaking TV producer who began his career with teenagers. He created "Beverly Hills, 90210," then "Melrose Place." And in a sense, he never left them behind. Whether it's "Sex And The City," "Younger" or the fatuous "Em

The Master of Compulsively Watchable TV

Emily in Paris returns to Netflix August 15.

Photo: Erik Tanner

For about as long as any millennial has been watching television, Darren Star has been making it: Beverly Hills 90210, Melrose Place, Sex and the Metropolis, Younger, Emily in Paris. His hits span four decades and various business models in the medium — broadcast, cable, streaming — all known for their compulsive watchability. It’s possible that what he loves most about writing television is the operate of starting a new show; once each one had set up its legs, he often left to do it again elsewhere. Nostalgia doesn’t interest him. “I’m a shark,” he says. “I like to keep looking forward.” In person, the 63 year old is tanned and smiley, wearing a fitted black T-shirt and white jeans. At his suggestion, we have lunch at Union Square Cafe, a classic ’80s restaurant that hasn’t missing its audience. “As I always say, ‘You really only depend on one hit show at a time,’” he tells me.

You were 28 when Beverly Hills 90210 was green-lit. What was the original pitch?
I said that no one had written a display about teenagers from a teenage point of view. Movies fancy The Bre